Next up for acquisition workforce: virtual training

By Mark Rockwell

Jan 16, 2014

The agency charged with overseeing development of the government's acquisition workforce says mobile apps that urge users to help solve theoretical disease epidemics, fly electronic versions of Coast Guard rescue helicopters and dissect frogs can be an inspiration for federal contracting officers.

The GSA's Federal Acquisition Institute issued a solicitation Jan. 14 through the General Services Administration's Federal Acquisition Service looking for companies to develop "interactive challenge" mobile apps for virtual acquisition training for the federal acquisition workforce.

FAI said the success of other interactive mobile apps -- the Center for Disease Control's "Solve the Outbreak," NASA's "Space Place" suite that includes "Rescue 406," and Froguts.com's biosimulations -- inspired the solicitation.

The Federal Acquisition Institute was established in 1976 under the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act and charged with fostering and promoting the development of a federal acquisition workforce.

The idea of acquisition apps, said FAI's solicitation, is to give federal acquisition workers a place to experiment virtually with techniques and strategies, reinforcing their knowledge of specific projects without having to deal – right away, at least -- with any real-world consequences.

The solicitation noted that virtual environments provide immersive learning experience and "when coupled with tactile feedback, can simulate real life situations and teach learners how to plan and manage potential issues." More traditional training methods "don't always allow for or even encourage unpredicted courses of actions due to fear of the user making a mistake."

It added that the apps could ease the fiscal strain of rising costs for live training.

About the Author

Mark Rockwell is a staff writer covering acquisition, procurement and homeland security. Contact him at mrockwell@fcw.com or follow him on Twitter at @MRockwell4.

The Census Bureau hasn't established a time frame for its cloud computing plans, including testing for scalability, security, and privacy protection, as well as determining a budget for cloud services.